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Budgetary impact analysis of a primary care-based hepatitis C treatment program: Effects of 340B Drug Pricing Program

Abstract

PURPOSE: 

Safety-net health systems, which serve a disproportionate share of patients at high risk for hepatitis Cvirus (HCV) infection, may use revenue generated by the federal drug discount pricing program, known as 340B, to support multidisciplinary care. Budgetary impacts of repealing the drug-pricing program are unknown. Our objective was to conduct a budgetary impact analysis of a multidisciplinary primary care-based HCV treatment program, with and without 340B support.

METHODS: 

We conducted a budgetary impact analysis from the perspective of a large safety-net medical center in Boston, Massachusetts. Participants included 302 HCV-infected patients (mean age 45, 75% male, 53% white, 77% Medicaid) referred to the primary care-based HCV treatment program from 2015-2016. Main measures included costs and revenues associated with the treatment program. Our main outcomes were net cost with and without 340B Drug Pricing support.

 

RESULTS: 

Total program costs were $942,770, while revenues totaled $1.2 million. With the 340B Drug Pricing Program the hospital received a net revenue of $930 per patient referred to the HCV treatment program. In the absence of the 340B program, the hospital would lose $370 per patient referred. Ninety-seven percent (68/70) of patients who initiated treatment in the program achieved a sustained virologic response (SVR) at a net cost of $4,150 each, among this patient subset.

 

CONCLUSIONS: 

The 340B Drug Pricing Program enabled a safety-net hospital to deliver effective primary care-based HCV treatment using a multidisciplinary care team. Efforts to sustain the 340B program could enable dissemination of similar HCV treatment models elsewhere.

Authors

Jones EA1, Linas BP2, Truong V3, Burgess JF1, Lasser KE2,3.

 

PLoS One. 2019 Mar 14;14(3):e0213745. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213745. eCollection 2019.

Author Information

  1. Boston University, School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States of America.

  2. Boston University, School of Medicine, Boston, MA, United States of America.

  3. Boston Medical Center, Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston, MA, United States of America.

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